âMe too,' Bliss whispered.
âWhat about you, son? Are you after earrings too?' said Mum, leaning over and ruffling Baxter's stubby crew cut. âLong dangly earrings with sparkly bits.'
âLeave it out, Mum,' said Baxter, swatting at her. âI'm driving the bus. Whoops, now you've made me run over two old ladies. Never mind, they're just boring. I'll get those young ones too â squish, squash, squeal.'
âMy son, the homicidal maniac,' said Mum.
âYour
son
?' said a fat bloke across the aisle from us. âThey're not all
your
kids, are they? I thought you were their big sister!'
âNo, I'm their mum,' said Mum.
âGo on! You don't look old enough.'
âI was a child bride,' said Mum, smiling.
She was only fifteen when she had me. When I was little we got mistaken for sisters all the time. Sometimes we even
played
we were sisters. I liked it best when I acted the big sister and Mum was the little one and had to do what I said. We used to play all these lovely games together until Mum lumbered herself with Mikey and the twins. He cleared off and Mum said good riddance. But then she got off with druggy Paul and started Pixie. She is hopeless with men, my mum. She was even tossing her hair about and acting all smiley-smiley with this silly fat man on the bus.
âWhere are you off to, then?' he asked.
âThe shops, the shops!' said Pixie.
âAnd McDonald's,' said Baxter. âI'm going to drive the bus right up to the entrance. No, I'm going to drive it
into
mcDonald's, right up to the counter!'
âCheers, mate â then I can buy myself a Big Mac too,' said the fat man. âThen you drive round to my place and you kids can all play in my nice garden while your mum and I have a little cosy get-together indoors.'
âNo! Don't go, Mum,' Bliss whispered, taking him seriously.
âUs “cosy together”?' said Mum, laughing. âAs if, Mister!'
âWhy not, eh?' he said. âYour old fella still around, is that it?'
âI've got myself a
new
fella,' said Mum. She breathed in deeply, her eyes sparkling. âA lovely new fella, so sorry, mate. I'm taken.'
âThen he's a
lucky
fella,' said the fat man, which was quite nice of him.
He wasn't the only guy looking at Mum on the bus. She looked so different today. Since Paul died she mostly just scraped her hair back in a limp pony-tail and didn't bother with make-up and wore washed-out old T-shirts and trackie bottoms and no one looked at her twice. But now, with her hair curled and her make-up and her tight top and good jeans, she looked wonderful. My heart thumped with pride when I looked at her.
It was a struggle getting us all downstairs when we got to the shopping centre. Baxter wanted to stay driving the bus till the last possible second. I had to prise his hands off the rail. Bliss threw a wobbly going downstairs, clutching me tight, scared she was going to fall. Pixie wriggled so much in Mum's arms she very nearly
did
fall. Then we got the buggy caught up with some old lady's shopping trolley, and this young lad leaped up and helped Mum. It was as if she had put a spell on every man in the town.
âCome on, kiddies, shopping, shopping, shopping!' said Mum, running along, even though she was wearing high heels, Pixie squealing with delight in her racing buggy.
We went to the Flowerfields shopping centre first because Pixie loved the singing dancing teddy bears in the main entrance hallway. Baxter loved them too. He lumbered about growling, pretending he was a bear. Poor silly Bliss was still a bit frightened of the giant bears and nuzzled her head against Mum, not looking.
âThey're lovely bears, just like the Three Bears in our fairy-story book,' I said, trying to encourage her.
âThey're not lovely, they eat you all up,' said Bliss indistinctly, because she was sucking her fingers.
âYou're getting your fairy stories mixed up. That was the wolf in Little Red Riding Hood,' I said.
âI'm a bear-wolf and I'm going to
eat you up
, Bliss,' Baxter growled, waving his arms around and thrusting his face against hers.
Bliss squealed and Mum shook both of them.
âStop being so daft, you two. Pixie's got far more sense and she's half your age. Stop messing about or you won't get a treat, do you understand?'
But she wasn't really cross at all. She was loving the bears too, singing along to all the silly songs and doing little dance steps round the buggy.
We watched the whole bear routine three times and then went off shopping. We spent way more than ten pounds but I didn't comment. But I couldn't keep my lip buttoned when Mum flashed a new credit card. She said her friend Jenny had âsold' it to her. I felt sick as soon as I saw it. Mum wasn't supposed to have any credit cards at all. She'd got into a lot of debt when she first met Paul and she'd tried to buy stuff using a stolen credit card and she'd ended up in the magistrates' court. I was so scared then in case they sent Mum to prison, but she played dumb and they let her off with a fine, thank goodness. I was sure they wouldn't let her off again if she tried anything dodgy.
â
Mum!
' I hissed, as she flashed her card in Claire's, buying bangles and a sparkly hairslide for Bliss and a little pink handbag and a lipstick set for Pixie.
âStop fussing, Lily,' Mum said firmly.
âBut you're not meant to.'
âShut
up
,' Mum said. She raised her eyebrows at the shop assistant. âKids! She's just sulking because I won't let her have the necklace she wants.'
This was so mean I nearly cried. I just stood there, red-faced, trembling that the credit card would be rejected â but amazingly Mum knew the right pin number and the transaction went through. Baxter was barging about the shop, pointing at everything, going, âYuck, too pink, yuck, too girlie,' over and over again.
When we got outside the shop Mum prodded him in the stomach and went, âYuck, nasty smelly bad boy!' Then she looked at me. âDon't give me that look! I could knock your block off, making all that fuss in there. You were acting like I'd nicked that card.'
âWell, didn't you?'
âI
told
you, I got it off Jenny.'
âAnd where did she get it from?'
âJust stop it, Lily. Who do you think you are, someone from
The Bill
? OK, don't feel you
have
to accept a present off my dodgy card.'
âI don't want one, thanks,' I said, and I marched off further up the mall.
I felt tears pricking my eyelids and blinked furiously. I wasn't a crybaby. I certainly wasn't going to start blubbing in public. I forced myself to stride out, swinging my arms as if I didn't have a care in the world. I couldn't hear the clatter of the buggy or the chatter of the kids. Weren't they following me? My heart started banging in my chest. No, maybe I really didn't care. I was really cheesed off with Mum and fed up with my brother and sisters. I was better off on my own.
âI am Lily and I walk alone,' I muttered. I stepped onto the escalator to the next floor. I looked down as I rose upwards. âI am Lily and I
fly
alone,' I said, spreading my arms. I imagined stepping off the escalator, swooping out into the atrium, circling round and round the glass roof, while all the crowds of shoppers pointed and marvelled down below.
My arms rose of their own accord and I leaned sideways over the moving handrail.
âLily! What the hell are you doing? Watch out, you'll topple over!' Mum was yelling up at me, dragging Pixie in the buggy onto the escalator and yanking at Baxter and Bliss. I waited at the top for them, acting nonchalant.
âYou mad girl, what were you
playing
at?' Mum said, giving me a good shake. Then she hugged me hard. âI thought you were trying to top yourself.'
âOh, Mum, don't be crazy. I was just playing I could fly.'
âFly? You're the crazy one. Stop playing silly flying beggars.'
But later, as we wandered around the toy shop, Mum seized a little sparkly pair of fairy wings.
âHere you are, Lily. This is what you need,' she said, snorting with laughter.
âOh, ha ha,' I said, flicking the toy wings contemptuously, though if I'd been as little as Pixie, or even Bliss, I'd have clamoured for them.
âWhat do you want for a present, babe, seriously?' said Mum, as she bought Baxter a toy fork-lift truck.
âNothing.'
âOh, come on, stop sulking,' said Mum. âLook at the face on you! Hey, cheer up, cootchy-cootchy-coo.' She tickled me under the chin as if I was a baby.
âLeave it out! Mum, stop it!' I doubled up, spluttering. I'm hopelessly ticklish and it's a horrible disadvantage. You find yourself shrieking with laughter even when you're furious.
âThat's my girl!' Mum said, digging her thumb and finger in my cheeks. âMy Little Miss Smiley's come back. Come on, pet, I'm in the mood for treating you. What do you want?'
âWell . . . can I have a big drawing pad just for me?'
âOf course you can, silly.'
Mum didn't get any old drawing pad with rough paper from one of the pound shops. She took us to a special art shop and bought me a giant pad of smooth white cartridge paper, and a new big set of felt-tip pens, all different subtle shades, so I could draw real-looking people, not girls with bright red skin and canary yellow hair. She spent more than the tenner I wanted for the school trip but she was having such fun it seemed mean to point this out. She bought us all sweets and chocolates too, and a couple of celebrity mags for herself and comics for the kids. She wanted to buy me a magazine too, so I chose
My Gorgeous Home
so I could get ideas for my own gorgeous home in the future.
âYou want
this
one?' said Mum, wrinkling her nose. âYou're the weirdest kid ever, Lily. Look, it's twice the price of all the others!' But she bought it all the same.
âNow it's
my
turn for treats,' said Mum, and she pushed the buggy into a big fashion store.
I got really worried then. Each time she used that credit card I was scared it would be refused â and even if it was genuine, I knew Mum would never have enough money to pay the bill at the end of the month.
âMind the kids while I just try this top and skirt on, Lily. Oh, and this dress! Do you think I can just about wriggle into it? What is it? You've got that face on again.'
âMum, it's nearly two hundred pounds!'
âYeah, well, why should I always have to make do with cheap rubbish from down the market. I'm going up to town tonight, you know I am. I want to look the part.'
âBut how will you ever pay it off ?'
âYou were born middle-aged, you. You've got to have a bit of fun while you can. Live for the moment, Lily, that's my motto. Snatch a bit of happiness when you get the chance.'
Mum tried the clothes on. The top was a bit too low and showed a lot of Mum's bony chest.
âNever mind, I can get one of those push-up bras, that'll do the trick. The skirt's OK, isn't it, Lily?'
I thought the skirt was too tight and too short, but it wasn't very expensive so I said it looked great. I hoped Mum would stick with the top and the skirt, but she tried the dress on too. It really did look lovely. It was pearly grey, very silky and slinky.
âOh, look, it's dead classy, isn't it! Oh, wait till Gordon sees me in this. He'll love it, I know he will.'
âGordon, Gordon, Gordon,' said Pixie, chuckling at the funny name.
âWho's Gordon?' asked Bliss.
âMy new boyfriend,' Mum said proudly.
â
I'm
your boyfriend, Mum,' said Baxter. âYeah, I'm going to take you out dancing in that pretty dress.'
âIt
is
pretty, isn't it, darling? You think I should buy it, don't you?'
âYes, of course, Mum.'
I sighed. It was hopeless. The kids were just egging her on, because they didn't understand. I was starting to get really worried. It wasn't just the credit card. Mum was getting so worked up about meeting Gordon. I kept wondering if he would even turn up. I'd watched enough romances in the soaps on telly. Young men sometimes fell for older women, but their relationships were never long term. Posh people sometimes hooked up with poor people, but generally it was for a one-night stand. Gordon was young and posh, Mum was older and poor â
and
she had four children.
Perhaps that was why she needed to buy the slinky dress, with the skirt and top as back-up outfits. She bought them all and kept poking her hand into the carrier bag to stroke them lovingly. She took us to a McDonald's for lunch, buying us all burgers and French fries, but she just nibbled a few chips herself.
âI'm too excited to eat,' she said. âBesides, I need to keep my tummy as flat as possible â that new dress doesn't half cling.'
âMum, you've got to eat.'
âI'll probably be having a meal with Gordon. Somewhere fancy, with waiters and soft lights and maybe a violin playing.'
âYou're making it all up!'
âWell, why can't I pretend a bit? You do all the time, Lily.'
âYes, but you're the grown-up. And you're making it up too much.'
Mum bent her head close to mine. âDon't spoil it for me,' she whispered.
âI just don't want you to get hurt,' I said.
âIs Mum going to get hurt?' Bliss asked anxiously.
âNo, of course I'm not, pet. I'm going to go out and have the night of my life,' said Mum.